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549 Leading Japan’s Most Difficult Generation Of Workers

549 Leading Japan’s Most Difficult Generation Of Workers

FromThe Leadership Japan Series


549 Leading Japan’s Most Difficult Generation Of Workers

FromThe Leadership Japan Series

ratings:
Length:
12 minutes
Released:
Feb 28, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Leaders now face a pivotal moment in business in Japan.  Do they continue to cling to the past? Do they replay what they went through when they were younger and lead as they were taught by their seniors or do they change the angle of approach?  Japan rebuilt itself after the devastation of the war.  The workers slaved away, adding a notch to their collective belts as they slowly overtook the GNP levels of leading European countries. I remember how proud some Japanese company employees were when they overtook the UK. They were winning the post-war economic battle after having lost the wartime military struggle. Getting to global number two status was built on the 6 days a week working dedication of today’s retired great grandparents. Not only six days a week, but incredibly long hours and long commutes. Sundays were spent playing golf with clients.  Company holidays were shared with colleagues, as well as beers after hours.  In a nutshell, men worked at the same company until retirement and married women had to quit their jobs to raise the kids. For the men, there was not much family time, and the women were basically raising the kids on their own, like single mothers, but with more stable incomes. When I arrived here on April 1st, 1979, it was still like that.  School and work were six days a week endeavours. There were few women in business after marriage and usually only one breadwinner in the household. While I was studying at university, I used to teach English at companies at night. Sure enough, they were still there, the salarymen reading the sports newspaper at their desk, wasting their time waiting for the boss to leave, so they could go home.  Even when I came back for the third time to work in 1992, when interviewing sales staff for jobs, often they would tell me they quit their company because the long hours made them exhausted and ill.  When I heard that same story repeatedly, I connected it back to my earlier experiences of the 1970s and 1980s and knew they were telling me the truth. These are the people who have been doling out the OJT - On-The-Job Training - to each succeeding generation.  What about today, though, when there are many more job openings than enough people to fill them?  The drop off in overseas study has made the competent English-speaking Japanese staff member a rare bird, compared to a few decades ago.  This young generation of Japanese staff holds the whip hand in the current employment configuration between boss and workers. Are companies doing anything about this, other than whining about how hard it is to hire people?  From what I can see, they are focused on whining rather than taking the right actions.  OJT has been a smokescreen for doing very little for a long time. The spread of the personal computer drove a stake through the heart of OJT.  Let me explain why. Bosses now had to do their own typing, rather than having female secretaries do it for them.  I am going to digress and tell an interesting story about how much things have moved on. The average age of my fellow Rotarians in my Tokyo Rotary Club is 70.  It is changing now, but twenty years ago, it was not uncommon for these gentlemen (and until very recently they were all men) to give me their business card, but sans an email address. Why?  They were captains of industry, but not computer literate. They depended on their secretaries to take care of all their correspondence, including this newfangled thing called email on a computer, involving something called the internet. Their Middle Managers were also under attack. Their time was increasingly being consumed with emails and meetings.  In this messy mix of modernity and technology, time became tighter, and that meant the coaching component of OJT was truncated down to the bare minimum.  Over the last twenty years, the number of young Japanese has halved.  That process has been gradual, like a creeping demographic rust in the corporate machine. Now the Middle Manager class is wak
Released:
Feb 28, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Leading in Japan is distinct and different from other countries. The language, culture and size of the economy make sure of that. We can learn by trial and error or we can draw on real world practical experience and save ourselves a lot of friction, wear and tear. This podcasts offers hundreds of episodes packed with value, insights and perspectives on leading here. The only other podcast on Japan which can match the depth and breadth of this Leadership Japan Series podcast is the Japan's Top Business interviews podcast.